[R] evaluation of discriminant functions+multivariate homosce dasticity
Marc R. Feldesman
feldesmanm at pdx.edu
Wed Jan 21 18:05:12 CET 2004
At 07:58 AM 1/21/2004, Dave Andrae wrote:
>I seem to remember, from a course in which I used SPSS for LDA, that
>Box's M is an ultra-sensitive test as well and that in almost all
>practical applications it's not useful, so Prof. Ripley's comments
>apply to that test, too.
Professor Ripley is quite right about Box's M. I wrote a crude S-Plus
script for this years ago to see if I could find a real (i.e. not
simulated) data set for which Box's M would give a non-significant
result. Using data from my field (primate and human functional anatomy), I
found no instance where my data weren't "non-normal" by Box's
criterion. And in many of those instances, lda worked "perfectly" anyway
(i.e. 95 - 100% of cases correctly classified).
As far as I'm concerned, Box's M is of no use in anything I do. At the
same time, if you want the crude script (not guaranteed to work in R since
I haven't bothered to test it), I'll send it to you b/c. In my opinion, it
isn't worth the effort to clean it up or to test it under R.
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